"Two or three years, I think."
"Has he no friends?" continued Miss Leslie scathingly.
"I don"t know, I am sure."
"No mother, of course?"
"No."
Miss Leslie nodded.
"I have always maintained," she observed, "that there ought to be a law appointing women inspectors to go round and look after the rooms of young men that live alone in London. Their motives would be misunderstood, of course, but it would be worth while, all the same. Is there a servant-body of any kind in this place?"
"He says that a woman comes in every morning and tidies up."
"I should like to meet her," said Miss Leslie grimly. "I expect she could a tale unfold. Where does he get his food, and how does he eat it?
Off the floor?"
"I don"t know," said Peggy, who had sat very silent through this tirade.
"I--I had no idea it was as bad as this."
They invaded the tiny pantry. Here they found a teapot, together with a cup and saucer, two plates, a knife, a fork, and a spoon. There was also a small frying-pan, and a tarnished cruet-stand. A very dingy dishcloth hung upon a nail at the back of the door. There were receptacles which had evidently at one time contained tea, sugar, and salt, but they were empty. The lady who tidied up had seen to that. The place was dusty, and smelt of mice.
"And he told me only yesterday that he was very happy here," remarked Miss Leslie. "Poor, poor body!"
They returned to the sitting-room, and, having selected the necessary books from a heap upon the floor, turned to go. But Miss Leslie"s attention was arrested by something upon the mantel-piece.
"Bless me," she exclaimed, "what"s that?"
"That" was the Meldrum Carburettor, the original model--the solitary ornament of the apartment.
"He invented it, I think," said Peggy. "Didn"t he tell you about it?"
"He did," replied Miss Leslie, "several times. Well, let us be stepping.
This place gives me the creepies."
She marched out of the room and began to descend the staircase. Peggy, hanging back for a moment, unexpectedly produced a diminutive pocket-handkerchief from her belt, and put it furtively to one of its uses.
After that, flinging a defiant glance round the empty room, she picked up the books from the table and turned once more to the door. Suddenly her eye was caught by a gleam of colour at her feet. It was a pink carnation--one of a small bunch which Philip had given to her. He had bought them in the street during his first outing in a bath-chair, and after keeping them for three days had taken the flowers in one hand and his courage in the other and made the presentation. They were slightly faded--a fact upon which their recipient had not failed to comment.
Indeed, she had accused the donor, to his great distress, of having bought them second-hand.
Well, here was one of the bunch lying on the dusty floor: Peggy had dislodged it from her belt in replacing her handkerchief.
She picked it up, and gazed thoughtfully about the room. Then she tiptoed across to the mantelpiece, and proceeded to ornament the Meldrum Carburettor with a floral device. Then she ran guiltily down stairs after Miss Leslie.
II
"Philip," enquired Miss Falconer of her patient that evening, "how much money have you got?"
Philip ruminated.
"I don"t quite know," he said. "How much do you want?"
"I want enough to find decent rooms for you to live in. Can you afford it?"
"I suppose so. I don"t spend half my income at present. My father left me a good deal, and I have my salary as well. But what is the matter with my present abode?"
"It is poky, and dirty, and unfurnished, and quite impossible," said Peggy with finality. "You must move into something better."
"The rooms suited me well enough," objected Philip. "I got through a good lot of work there. Besides, they were handy for Oxford Street."
"Nevertheless, you will leave them," announced Peggy.
Philip glowed comfortably. He liked being ordered about by his Lady. It showed that she took more than a pa.s.sing interest in him, he argued.
"If I do," he said cunningly, "will you come and see me there sometimes?
Tea, or something? You could bring Miss Leslie," he added.
"Mayhap," replied Peggy indulgently. "But listen: I have a plan. I think you and Tim Rendle ought to take rooms together. At present he is in a very stupid, expensive set of chambers in Park Place, wasting a lot of money and getting into bad habits. You could club together and take a lovely little flat, say in Knightsbridge, and have a proper servant and decent meals. Will you? Philip, what are you frowning about?"
Philip"s little glow of happiness had died away as suddenly as it came.
That Peggy should make plans for his future was gratifying enough. But to be urged by one"s Best Beloved to set up a permanent bachelor establishment is not an unmixed delight. Such a recommendation points in the wrong direction. Philip would have been better pleased had Peggy advised him to take a real house somewhere.
Besides, the mention of Timothy had spoiled everything. Not that Philip was jealous, but Timothy"s inclusion in the scheme had shorn the situation of its romance at a single blow. For one foolish moment Philip had imagined that Peggy"s concern for his welfare and comfort had their roots in deep soil; but now the whole enterprise stood revealed for what it was--a mere feminine plot: a piece of maternal officiousness. Timothy and Philip were to be put into chambers together--Timothy to brighten up that dull dog Philip, and Philip to act as a check upon that irresponsible young idiot Timothy. Hence the ungracious frown. But his spoken objections took a different line.
"Knightsbridge is a long way from Oxford Street," he said.
"I know," replied Peggy calmly. "That is why I chose it."
"Tim would rather interfere with my work," Philip continued.
"I know," repeated Peggy. "That is why I chose _him_! He will be a nice distraction."
"He will," growled Philip.
Suddenly Peggy flared up.
"Philip," she asked hotly, "why are you so cross? Don"t you like Timothy?"
"Yes, of course, I do; but--"
"And wouldn"t it be pleasant to have his company?"
"Yes, rather! But--"
"But what?"
Philip reddened.